Dramatic increase in the thermal boundary conductance and radiation limit from a Nonequilibrium Landauer Approach
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Thermal boundary conductance (TBC) is critical in many thermal and energy applications. A decades-old puzzle has been that many of the measured TBCs, such as those well characterized across Al/Si and ZnO/GaN interfaces, significantly exceed theoretical results or even the absolute upper limit called the ``radiation limit", suggesting the failure of the theory. Here, we identify that for high-transmission interfaces, the commonly assumed phonon local thermal equilibrium adjacent to the interface fails, and the measurable phonon temperatures are not their emission temperature. We hence develop a ``nonequilibrium Landauer approach" and define the unique ``dressed" and ``intrinsic" TBCs. Combining our approach even with a simple diffuse mismatch model (DMM) nearly doubles the theoretical TBCs across the Al/Si and ZnO/GaN interfaces, and the theoretical results agree with experiments for the first time. The radiation limit is also redefined and found to increase over 100\% over the original radiation limit, and it can now well bound all the experimental data.
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